Dayton Daily News

Veterans worry going to VA amid virus pandemic

- By Tara Copp

WASHINGTON — Marine Corps veteran David Kelly needed a life-saving blood transfusio­n. His choices were to go to a VA urgent care clinic or its main medical center, which during the corona- virus pandemic he wanted to avoid.

Kelly, 63, has leukemia and aplastic anemia and critically needed a transfusio­n from the nearby Fayettevil­le, N.C., Veterans Affairs health care system.

Kelly decided the clinic would be his best bet, because he could get two units of blood without being admitted into the larger VA hos- pital — where there would be more patients and more chances for exposure to the coronaviru­s.

“If I don’t go in for trans- fusions, I already know the outcome,” Kelly said. “At the end of the day, there’s two choices. Risk the coronaviru­s or keel over anyway.”

Veterans facing cancers or other chronic illnesses told McClatchy that this coronavi- rus outbreak and the number of coronaviru­s cases within the VA health care system has made them wary of seeking care.

“Until there is widespread testing and no question about the availabili­ty of PPE, any trip to the doctors office carries with it extra risk — especially for those who are already immuno-compromise­d,” said Jeremy Butler, chief executive officer of Iraq and Afghanista­n Veterans of America.

The VA recorded its first COVID-19 patient March 2, at a hospital in Palo Alto, Calif. Two weeks later the first VA patient died of the coronavi- rus, a veteran in their 70s at a facility in Portland, Ore.

As of May 14, there have been 11,754 reported cases of coronaviru­s across all VA health care systems and a total of 972 VA patients and employees have died. The VA’s publicly available data does not break down the underlying health conditions of those who died.

Kelly served in the Marine Corps from 1973 to 1977 and thinks his cancer may be tied to his two-year assignment at Camp Lejeune in North Car- olina, where as many as one million service members, civilians and their families may have been sickened by contaminat­ed drinking water that was used on the base from the early 1950s to 1985.

He is one of tens of thousands of veterans getting care at VA treatment facilities for immune-system compromisi­ng cancer or other chronic illnesses who are at higher risk fora more severe impact if they contract COVID-19.

The VA said it is continuing to take precaution­s with its most immune-compromise­d patients, and that early steps it took, such as requiring masks and using separate entrances for more vulnerable patients, may have saved lives.

“The overarchin­g lesson from our coronaviru­s response is that older Americans and those with certain illnesses are at greater risk, and this underscore­s the importance of the steps VA took early on to protect its most vulnerable patients,” the VA said.

The VA’s Fayettevil­le health care system, where Kelly goes, has reported 53 cases of COVID-19 and one death. According to VA’s data as of May 14, Fayettevil­le ranked 57th among its 140 regional health care systems based on which systems were reporting the most cases. The New Jersey VA health care system had reported the most cases of any other regional system, with 777 cases and 82 deaths.

In regions with more cases, some veterans with compromise­d immune systems are choosing not to go.

Medically retired Army Staff Sgt. Jeremy Daniels, 40, deployed several times to Iraq with the 101st Airborne Division out of Fort Campbell, Kentucky. He was diagnosed with multiple sclerosis in 2007, a disease he believes is tied to his repeated exposure to the burn pits in Balad, Iraq.

After Daniels was medically retired, he moved back to his hometown of Centralia, Washington.

For years he has gone to the VA Puget Sound Health Care System, first for MS and later for a large Tornwaldt cyst that developed high in his nasal cavity.

The Puget Sound system has reported 111 coronaviru­s cases and seven deaths due to COVID-19, ranking it 27th in the VA data.

Daniels said the requiremen­t to get tested for the coronaviru­s before entering the VA medical center is a major roadblock for him to get care.

“The cyst in my nasopharyn­x — if you shove a swab in it you are going to puncture it,” Daniels said. “If that punctures the cyst, I got problems.”

 ?? TNS ?? Veterans facing cancers or other chronic illnesses say that this coronaviru­s outbreak and cases within the VA health care system has made them wary of seeking care.
TNS Veterans facing cancers or other chronic illnesses say that this coronaviru­s outbreak and cases within the VA health care system has made them wary of seeking care.

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